Tuesday, March 27, 2012

One way of testing the claim is to ask if Earth has any computer like qualities which might be capable of intelligent thought, and if it has is there a way of testing that intelligence. A Turing test for the planet is difficult to conceive.

Defining intelligence as knowledge applied for a purpose leads to the conclusion that Earth has indeed done just that. and so is an intelligent being.

For the sake of this argument I will refer
to humanity as the mind of Earth. This though is intended only to demonstrate a
point and I make no claim for our sole tenure of that position.

Earth compared to a Computer

One way
of looking at the question of whether Earth can be described as intelligent is
to ask how it compares to a computer. If Earth is comparable to a stored program
computer then it should have the same minimum components as a computer: The
ability to input data and programs, as well as output its result, short term
storage and processing, long term storage.

It is easy enough to argue that humanity,
taken as a whole, does indeed have all these characteristics. We can gather
information and take in instructions; humans can individually store information
and make decisions based on that information for perhaps a hundred years.
Collectively we have devised methods for storing data and passing on
instructions for periods into the thousands of years-though not without signal
decay. We can take action based on our collective knowledge, and pass on our
new understanding to the next generation.

To claim that these are characteristics of
the planet, and not just the species, as a minimum it is necessary to show that
the characteristics are capable of emerging from a process common to many
species.

It is generally accepted that the process
of evolution works by passing advantageous traits on from one generation to
another. So the storing and modifying of instruction is certainly an internal
function of life on the planet. Habitat or territory is another thing passed
through generations by many species. It is arguable that for humans the passing
on of territory, as an advantageous trait for the genes, became the passing on
of property for the same reason. Likewise the passing on of hunting skills
became the passing on of codified knowledge from generation to generation.

So the computer like
characteristics present in humanity are not limited to our species but are a
facet of all life on Earth

The Turing Test

Compared to evolution there is much less
agreement on what is intelligence. So when Alan Turing first asked the question
of whether electronic ‘brain’ machines were intelligent or not he had to cut
through most of the debate on the nature of intelligence to propose a simple practical test.

In his original description of the test
Turing proposed that the computer take part in an imitation game:

“It is played with three people, a man (A),
a woman (B), and an interrogator (C) who may be of either sex. The interrogator
stays in a room apart from the other two. The object of the game is to
determine which of the other two is the man and which is the woman. We now ask the question, 'What will happen
when a machine takes the part of A in this game?' Will the interrogator decide
wrongly as often when the game is played like this as he does when the game is
played between a man and a woman?”

Turing’s idea was that a machine should be
called intelligent if it can not be distinguished from a person in a practical
test. In other words it does as well, or as badly, as a human who is credited
with intelligence.

One good thing about this approach is that
it avoids precise definitions and measures of intelligence. Certainly at the
time Turing was writing, and still to too large an extent, many definitions of,
and tests for, intelligence can be criticised on the basis that often seem set
up to prove that the person or group who originated the test are more
intelligent than others.

It is difficult to conceive of an
equivalent to the Turing test that could be taken by an entire planet,
especially as the testers are part of that planet themselves. So another way must be found.

Intelligence

Turing’s introduction to the imitation game
has been widely criticised, even his biographer Andrew Hodges seems to suggest
the introduction is frivolous. To me however the imitation game illustrates
something very important.

For any animal meeting another member of
their own species surely an important first question is to ask; ‘Potential mate
or potential rival?’

Framed in this way the question is
irrelevant to a computer. But framing the question in this way shows, I
believe, that in this aspect at least intelligence is not neutral. Ultimately
the intelligence demonstrated in the imitation game is one where knowledge is
applied in the service of biology–even possibly of evolution.

This then is what leads me to a definition
of intelligence against which Earth can be tested. This is that intelligence is knowledge applied for a
purpose.

This has the immediate advantage to my mind
of answering the question of where intelligence lies in a Turing machine. It
can only lie in the running of a machine for a purpose and not in the tables. The tables represent
knowledge, but not its application.

Has Earth applied knowledge for a purpose?
Clearly the answer is yes, for knowledge, and energy, have been gathered and
built on to send life beyond the limits of the planet.

Friday, March 9, 2012

Did you ever have a moment when you thought about something familiar in a slightly different way? Suddenly a lot of things seem different. For me there was a moment when I was looking at a picture of a Wasp’s nest

A wasp’s nest is a complex structure, which wasps build with a paper like material. But when I said to myself ‘this is a wasp made structure’ the statement did not make sense. The way I have grown to see the world a wasp’s nest is natural, art of the natural world. If thinking about the ‘wasp made’ does not help us understand our world what about ‘man made’?

Fresh thought gave me fresh eyes. I started to think about how the natural world is shaped by creatures living together-grown like a coral reef. Our countryside, even the wild Burren, is shaped by farming. We are so proud of what we do that see our houses as different, special, not part of nature. Even when some wasp’s choose to build in the same location.

Seen with fresh eyes a spacecraft leaving Earth’s atmosphere is a thing of nature-a shell for soft skinned creatures to find more places to feed or live.

This brings so many questions. Why are creatures going there, and why so quickly? What does it mean for me, for all of us?

When you step out of the day-to-day world for a moment you can see there are answers.

Think about the idea for man to go to the moon. This idea was shared with the world in the story of the first fiction film in 1902. It became a physical reality less than seventy years later. In the history of the world seventy years is an astonishingly short time. Even if we date the idea to Jules Verne’s earlier book, about a hundred years, or the few thousand years since the ‘Tower of Babel’ was written of, it is an instant compared to the millions of years Earth has been inhabited.

And there you have it. Earth a living being thinking and acting. Ideas welling up in living creatures, who are driven to act.

That is the story I have to tell. Insane I know so I hope you will forgive me for thinking about it for a year or two before passing it on.